However, Levitre agent Leo Goeas said Andy did play. ... "Andy got in late in the first quarter and other than a couple of series played the rest of the game,'' Goeas said in an email. "He played the majority of his reps at left guard, however he did play right tackle as he had been all week. He had a very good performance, looking very strong in his run blocks. He had no sacks or pressures in the passing game.''

I don't know about Lewis, who missed the final North workout with muscle soreness (cramps again?).

Of course, the game is such an afterthought to the NFL scouts (who make their reports based on the practices) that most NFL personnel have left town long before kickoff.

A big corner with safety size, ex-OSU star Keenan Lewis will be playing on Sundays next season. ... if he can just keep from cramping up.

I thought Lewis made a tremendous jump during his career - remember his character-building freshman and sophomore seasons? - and it was a credit to the OSU staff (and Lew's work ethic) that he turned himself into a darkhorse Day 1 draft pick.

An excerpt from the New Orleans Times-Picayune:

He's the biggest of the nine cornerbacks at the Senior Bowl. Standing a shade under 6 feet 1 and weighing a solid 198 pounds, he's built more like a safety than a cornerback. His arm length of 32-3/4 inches was by far the longest at his position.

"He's got good size and can run with wide receivers, and those are things you can't teach," Cincinnati Bengals defensive backs coach Kevin Coyle, who is coaching the position for the North team. "Oregon State was a big press bump-and-run coverage team, so there's a learning curve here for him, but Keenan has shown that he's a quick and willing learner. He's very conscientious and wants to do well."

Lewis, like many of his teammates, was curious to know how he was performing this week.

"What have you heard?" he asked a reporter after Thursday's practice. "How do you think I've been doing?"

Keenan's HS coach calls it a Cinderella story that the O.P. Walker grad came out of that city, starred at Oregon State, and became an NFL-caliber player.

New Orleans might like to nab the hometown kid, but the Saints have the No. 14 pick in Round 1 (Lewis won't go that high) and then don't pick again until Round 4, when "Lew'' will likely be gone.

Hopefully, the cramping issues that plagued Lewis at Oregon State won't hurt him at the next level. We wondered if it was the cramps again (OSU trainer Barney Graff knows all about this) when we saw this Friday practice report last week from Mobile.